Archive for birthday

Happy Birthday ‘Dating God’ Blog!!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , on October 1, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Well today marks the first anniversary of the public launch of DatingGod.org! It’s hard to believe that a year has gone by already. As I look back over the year and reflect on what this project has meant for me, I recognize the shift in attitude that began with hesitancy and ambivalence at the idea of doing a “blog,” which at the time was the request of my publisher, to really being grateful for the opportunity to write and share daily with hundreds and thousands of readers as well as receive amazing support and occasional critique. The community of readers from all around the world have been incredibly generous in their enthusiasm for the website — thank you!

Here are couple stats and keys facts about DatingGod.org over the last year:

The favorite part of writing this blog has been the community of people that I’ve interacted with over the year. I’m curious to know: What is your favorite (or least favorite) thing about DatingGod.org this past year? Share your thoughts and comments and celebrate with us the 1st birthday of Dating God!

235 Years Later: What Are We About?

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on July 3, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Sunday 3 July 2011

Tomorrow marks the 235th ‘Birthday’ of the United States of America. Insofar as an idea or geographic demarcation (which today hardly resembles its comparatively minuscule original colonial boundaries) or a sovereign state or any other way to describe what we mean when we say USA can have a ‘Birthday,’ this weekend is the time set aside annually to celebrate that event. For many reasons, it is a time worthy of celebration. Yesterday I highlighted some reasons for which we must maintain a certain degree of faithful vigilance in the face of increased nationalism, a challenge to all who bear the name Christ to recall their priorities and re-examine their baptismal commitments.

Today, I want to pause to briefly consider what I believe this holiday weekend might offer us by way of a possibility for hope. I still believe in the often-misappropriated slogans and clichés used to describe the United State: “a beacon of hope” or the “land of opportunity” and the like. These concepts, these wishes remain true in their potentiality, but have not yet become realized.

If we return to consider the that late-eighteenth-century period when those colonial leaders gathered together with the insurrectionist plan to cut ties with England, we might better appreciate the founding of our nation’s heritage over and against the post facto (at best) or revisionist (at worst) attempts to replace historical fact with anachronism. What this nation was really founded on was an anti-imperialist sentiment. What has served as a “beacon of hope” for the world – what led to the French Revolution and to many of the anti-colonial revolts across the globe in the decades and centuries that followed – was the notion that imperialism was indeed not divinely ordained, but a violation of the rights of a people.

Yet, in so many ways we’ve become what we hated in the beginning. Like a child who has grown up to recognize in his or her own behavior those inherited parental traits most despised, 235-years-later the United States looks in the global mirror to see eighteenth-century England staring it back in the face. We have become what we hated about our parent nation, an empire whose expanse ultimately led to its recessive collapse. Its gubernatorial hubris propels expansion and the capitalist’s dream of ever-growing material accumulation.

Wars and meddling, intervention in foreign governmental affairs, ‘cultural’ exportation (do we really want the people of Thailand thinking that all United States citizens are represented by the cast of Jersey Shore?), the rise of unbridled capitalism at the expense of the citizenry, and so much more reminds the careful observer of the colonial impulse that dominated the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

Some might be wondering why I am offering such ostensibly critical remarks this Independence Day weekend. My response is only that so often these celebrations, done with the best and innocent intentions, can often mask some serious problematic issues we need to recognize and discuss.

Each time we grow a year older and blow out yet another candle on the birthday cake, it is natural to pause and reflect on whence we’ve come and wither we go. So too is that a good idea for us as a nation: Who are we? Where are we going? What are we about?

Photo: Stock

Happy Birthday to Thomas Merton

Posted in Thomas Merton, Uncategorized with tags , , on January 31, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Today marks the 96th birthday of the late Trappist monk and spiritual writer, Thomas Merton.

This is the beginning of the entry in Merton’s journal from January 31, 1968, the last birthday he would celebrate on this earth.

Clear, thin new moon appearing and disappearing between slow slate blue clouds – and the living black skeletons of the trees against the evening sky. More artillery than usual whumping at [Fort] Knox. It is my fifty-third birthday.

He spent the day, admittedly not working, but enjoying the unusual springlike afternoon around the monastery and near the pond. How will you celebrate Merton’s Birthday?

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